Information Bulgaria Privacy Policy

IE6 contains new privacy features based on the specifications of the Platform for Privacy
Preferences Project (P3P). However, at this time, many sites, have yet
to translate their privacy policies to work with the IE6 privacy features.
As with other new releases, sites are still learning how this process
actually works. This means that you may need to make adjustments until
the sites you use have time to make their sites P3P compatible. The steps
outlined here should help you understand how to use IE6 features. If you
are currently experiencing a problem accessing or using this Website,
you can read Understanding Changes Caused by Your Privacy
Settings, then read the directions in Designating
Preferred Sites. This will permit you to keep your selected privacy
setting and select "Accept All Cookies" for trusted sites, such
as this Website, that you wish to access.

Understanding
Changes Caused by Your Privacy Settings

IE6 is installed
with a default setting of Medium. At this level, IE6 may block cookies
or alter their behavior. This may affect how the sites you use work and
may impair full site functionality. While privacy alerts should let you
know if a cookie has been blocked, you need to know how to find out more
about what cookie was blocked and how the blocking will affect your experience.

If IE6 has
blocked cookies or other items on the site you are viewing or changes
how cookies behave, a small eye with a red circle in it will appear at
the bottom of the screen. This is next to the lock icon that indicates
that you are using a secure site.

You may have
upgraded to Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6.0 (IE6). This message is especially
important if you are experiencing problems in logging onto or accessing
components of this website.

This will list the site address on the left for each cookie that was blocked.
On the right there will be a message that says that a cookie was blocked.

You can also select the "Privacy Report" from the View menu to see all of the
content on the page you are viewing. This will indicate which cookies were
accepted, which cookies were blocked, and other items included on the page.

Designating Preferred Sites

You can select sites you trust that you want to treat
differently from unfamiliar sites. The "Preferred Site Designation"
feature of P3P was designed to permit you to designate certain trusted
sites. These may be sites that you are comfortable providing your information
to.

Right
click on the site address. A pop-up box will appear with three choices.
You can select the option to "Always accept cookies" for this
site. This will allow a trusted site to set the cookies that are required
to permit the functions you need while allowing you to retain your overall
privacy settings for other less familiar sites.

You will
also notice that you can block cookies from a particular site without
changing your overall privacy settings.

Once you have
designated a site to "Always accept cookies" you can close this
box. The site should now work as it did before you installed IE6. You can
now log on and utilize the site.

Select
Internet Options from the Internet Explorer Tools menu.

Select the Privacy tab, and then select Edit.

In Address of Web site, type the complete address of the Web site for which you
want to specify custom settings. For example, https://www.yahoo.com

To specify that you want Internet Explorer to always allow cookies from the specified Web site, select Allow. To specify that you want Internet Explorer to
never allow cookies from the specified Web site to be used, click Block.

The benefit of this feature is that you can select your overall privacy settings. You
may also chose different settings for sites you trust.

The descriptions provided in the IE6 Help section, indicate
how IE6 will ideally behave when all sites that you have had sufficient
time to upgrade to become P3P compatible. Today, many sites do not have
that capability. Until P3P compatibility is widespread, you may experience
denial of access or disruption of certain functionalities on sites you
previously used successfully.

How do I know if I have IE6?

If you use Internet Explorer and are not sure which version
you have, select "About Internet Explorer" from the Help menu
and see if it says version 6.0.

How Does P3P Define First
Party Web Sites and Third Party Web Sites?

While there are many positive aspects to the IE6.0 release
and its embedded P3P privacy tool, P3P's rigid and overly restrictive
definition of first and third party sites may create serious problems
for users and site sponsors.

According to the P3P specification as published by the
W3C (and consistent with privacy laws and the common understanding of
Internet users), First Party sites are those that are owned or controlled
in common by one company. However, in IE6.0's release, the P3P software
looks for an exact match on minimal domain name before it will classify
sites as first party sites with regard to each other.

Since many companies use different domain names, different
servers to enhance performance and third party proprietary content to
enrich sites, P3P in its current form may lead to blocking or changing
cookies set by what it perceives as "third parties". However
the user or site sponsor would never expect or want to be treated as "third
party" cookies. This is one reason why users may choose to designate
certain complex and trusted sites as "Preferred Sites" where
all cookies will be accepted.